Not quite sure what you are asking, but if it's why didn't they do both sides of the bridge, it's because they can't just close the entire Pike. They essentially are doing it all in one shot. One week on one side, another week on the other.
Not quite sure what you are asking, but if it's why didn't they do both sides of the bridge, it's because they can't just close the entire Pike. They essentially are doing it all in one shot. One week on one side, another week on the other. Whole thing is done Aug 14.
They're doing the Comm Ave outbound side of the bridge this year, and the inbound side next year. I assume that's so they can maintain traffic over the bridge for pedestrians, cyclists and buses.
But in order to rebuild the outbound side of Comm Ave, they're closing down and diverting first the inbound side of the Mass. Pike, then the outbound. Remember the one crosses the other, so there's effectively 4 quadrants to rebuild one at a time.
For people wondering why they did not do both side in one year, sequentially, you are missing the massive scale of this effort.
The closure of one side of Comm. Ave. and actual direct construction is 18 days (not 2 weeks). But there was staging work underway for a solid 2 months before that closure. You could not do the staging for both sides in sequence, so the entire process needed to be split into two operations.
You can only do the rapid demolition and rebuild (18 days) if you have all the careful staging in place first.
Oops, fixed.Well said, but just so everyone has it clear, you've got the comm ave inbound/outbound reversed...
They're doing the Comm Ave outbound side of the bridge this year, and the inbound side next year. I assume that's so they can maintain traffic over the bridge for pedestrians, cyclists and buses.
But in order to rebuild the outbound side of Comm Ave, they're closing down and diverting first the inbound side of the Mass. Pike, then the outbound. Remember the one crosses the other, so there's effectively 4 quadrants to rebuild one at a time.
They've also put a crane on the outbound side of Comm Ave during the second half of this week, so cyclists and buses are using the on and off ramps on the BU Bridge as a single lane.
Not sure if this has already been discussed, but why didn't they do the whole thing in one shot?
Thanks matredsoxfan...the utilities relocation piece was the last missing factor for me. Now it makes sense.
I totally agree staging is hard in general, and that the work scope here is really complex.
But I see the utilities piece as the make-or-break....because where I used to live, I'd witnessed several large highway bridges on I-93 replaced quickly even though the deck was similar sized. The difference though is that there were probably zero significant utilities running through them (and no light rail!), whereas this bridge is the major utilities conduit for the entire adjoining neighborhood.
RE: Bus shuttles.
I believe the universities (especially BU) use transit-style buses for their internal services. Would have made more sense to lease those.
Peter Pan was the only bidder, no one had transit buses they wanted to make available.